Legitimate and Peaceful Activism in Civil Disobedience: An Explanation and Evaluation of “Civil Disobedience” in John Rawls’ Theory of Justice

Seyed Ali Mahmoudi

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 1-37

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.39334.638

Abstract
  Civil disobedience in John Rawls’ theory of justice is protesting actions of citizens against some unjust laws and policy making in a democratic governments. The objective of such actions is reform and change on the basis of a constitution through rational and peaceful manners. Rawls relied on civil ...  Read More

Structural Characteristic of Government in Iran after the Islamic Revolution

he.shahriari@gmail.com he.shahriari@gmail.com

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 39-96

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.39165.634

Abstract
  Characteristics of state in Iran has attracted some of political scientists’ attraction since past times; therefore, various theories, including Patrimonial, Neo-Patrimonial, Sultanism, Absolutism, Rentier, Quasi-Modernity, Eastern Despotism, etc., have been proposed to examine the characteristics ...  Read More

Addressing the Relationship between Power, State and Society in Pre-Modern Iran

Mahdi Abbasi Shahkooh

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 97-129

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.12243.104

Abstract
  This article, using the method of historical sociology and the sociology of knowledge, attempts to address the power relations between society and government in Iran before the emergence of the Pahlavi state. Powerful social masters such as the royal family and their relatives, clergies, landowners, ...  Read More

The Late Public Policy- Making: The Transition from Government-Centralism to Governance

Valiallah Vahdaninia; Masood Darodi

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 131-170

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2019.32329.499

Abstract
  The characteristic of classical public policy was the will to power by a government that authoritatively and centrally formulated its policies and implemented them in the society under its control. With the increase of emerging problems and challenges that are affecting other problems in a complicated ...  Read More

Al-Sadir McIntyre’s Communitarianistic Confrontation with the Liberal State of the Modern Age

Tahmaseb Alipouriani; Mokhtar Nouri

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 171-208

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.16873.199

Abstract
  The institution of the modern state, based on the liberal doctrine of social contract, has been questioned in the age of globalization by the formation of paradigmatic transformations of political thought from different think tanks. This kind of criticism of liberal discourse encompasses a range of critical ...  Read More

The Status of Transparency in the Iranian Governmental Organizations

Abbas Nargesian; Ghasemali Jamali

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 209-243

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.17320.215

Abstract
  Reducing corruption, promoting accountability and gaining public trust and satisfaction are among the top goals of any government. One of the key and controversial tools in achieving these goals, transparency is achieved relying on the issue of free access to information. Government ministries, as the ...  Read More

The Fall of Reza Shah and the Transformation of Government in Kasravi’s Works

Vahid Sinaee; Abol-Ghasem Shahriari

Volume 5, Issue 18 , October 2019, Pages 245-269

https://doi.org/10.22054/tssq.2020.15978.172

Abstract
  The outbreak of World War II and the occupation of Iran on the pretext of the presence of German troops in this country had unfortunate consequences. The end of Reza Shah Administration meant the beginning of a new era in which absolute authority did not exist anymore. The deterioration of conditions ...  Read More